Roberta Bayley, the queen of punk, on New York’s raw years
- Text by Miss Rosen
- Photography by Roberta Bayley
After living in London in the early ’70s, California native Roberta Bayley arrived in New York in 1974 because it was the only return ticket she could afford back to the States.
Serendipity served Bayley well. She soon met a young musician by the name of Richard Hell and was asked to work the door when his band Television played at CBGB, a new club on the Bowery. Bayley fell in love with the emerging punk scene of the Lower East Side and began working at CBGB five nights a week.
In 1975, Bayley bought a camera and adopted the punk attitude to making art: sheer nerve. As chief photographer for Punk magazine, she would amass a singular archive of artists like Iggy Pop, Debbie Harry and Blondie, the Sex Pistols, the Damned, the Clash, the New York Dolls, X-Ray Spex and the Dead Boys, among others.
“Photography is more the eye than the technique,” Bayley says in Beth Lasch’s new documentary short, Roberta Bayley: She Just Takes Pictures. The film provides a whirlwind view of her 10-year career, kicking things off with her iconic black and white photograph of the Heartbreakers, which later appeared on the cover of the seminal punk oral history, Please Kill Me.
“That was right at the beginning: it was the fourth roll of film through my camera,” Bayley recalls. “Photography is pretty easy, you just push that button. I just went with it. I never learned to do any of that [technical] stuff. I learned to use a flash but basically I quit before I learned anything deep about photography.”
Going on instinct, Bayley knew she needed total freedom to create her work. She didn’t want to work in a studio; she wanted to be with the band, not just as a photographer but as friends. As an insider, Bayley got close to her subjects in a way few others could.
“I travelled with Blondie a few times,” she says. “We were the same age, the same level of success – not much. At a certain point, you’re just invisible if you’re always hanging around. ‘It’s just Roberta, what’s the big deal?’”
“That was definitely true at the Ramones session. If I had shown up with all these lights and a makeup person, it would have been a completely different situation. It was like, ‘It’s just Punk magazine – let’s get this over with.’ Sometimes that’s a good thing.”
From the very start of her career, Bayley’s talents were immediately recognised. Her Heartbreakers photos became a poster, her Ramones photo became an album cover, and her portrait of Richard Hell for Blank Generation was chosen by Lester Bangs as the worst album cover of all time in the Rolling Stone Book of Lists. “I thought that was great,” she says with a laugh. “It’s always good to be number one even if it’s the worst.”
Roberta Bayley: She Just Takes Pictures is out now.
Follow Miss Rosen on Twitter.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
Ghais Guevara: “Rap is a pinnacle of our culture”
What Made Me — In our new series, we ask artists and rebels about the forces and experiences that have shaped who they are. First up, Philadelphian rap experimentalist Ghais Guevara.
Written by: Ghais Guevara
Gaza Biennale comes to London in ICA protest
Art and action — The global project, which presents the work of over 60 Palestinian artists, will be on view outside the art institution in protest of an exhibition funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies.
Written by: Cyna Mirzai
Ragnar Axelsson’s thawing vision of Arctic life
At the Edge of the World — For over four decades, the Icelandic photographer has been journeying to the tip of the earth and documenting its communities. A new exhibition dives into his archive.
Written by: Cyna Mirzai
ATMs & lion dens: What happens to Christmas trees after the holiday season?
O Tannenbaum — Nikita Teryoshin’s new photobook explores the surreal places that the festive centrepieces find themselves in around Berlin, while winking to the absurdity of capitalism.
Written by: Isaac Muk
Resale tickets in UK to face price cap in touting crackdown
The move, announced today by the British government, will apply across sport, music and the wider live events industry.
Written by: Isaac Muk
Nearly a century ago, denim launched a US fashion revolution
The fabric that built America — From its roots as rugged workwear, the material became a society-wide phenomenon in the 20th century, even democratising womenswear. A new photobook revisits its impact.
Written by: Miss Rosen